Headmistress Powell

August 13, 2010 3:30 AM
Another year had come round, and a lot was the same: the Board of Governors was still questioning certain aspects concerning the running of the school, new first year students would still be arriving that morning, some more nervous than others, and once again Sonora was in need of a new Transfiguration Professor. Yes, these three aspects were predictable constants of a new term. Yet there was one aspect that Sadi had been unable to predict. During the family holiday to Romania this year (equal parts to visit the Valson side of the family and to appease Jera’s wishes by taking her dragon-spotting) she had contracted a virus – Neplac’s disease, a degenerative and aggressive illness for which there were assorted treatments, but as of yet there was no cure. As a generally optimistic and calm individual, Sadi was not experiencing great concern, as she had access to both Druids and Healers, but nevertheless she did have days when the virus was getting the better of her. Today happened to be one of those days.

It was customary for the Headmistress to Apparate to school on the first day of term, but she hadn’t the strength, and so had travelled from Colorado on a flying wagon with her daughter and other students, sleeping most of the way. She did not wish to worry her students, so on arrival to the school Sadi took a brief moment to scrutinize her reflection. Her skin was waxy and paler than usual, and dark rings around her eyes were visible but not too prevalent. Her once chestnut hair had grayed considerably over the past couple of weeks, but was tied, as ever, back into a neat knot at the nape of her neck. The Headmistress was wearing robes of a customary warm shade of brown, and wasted little time in returning to the Hall to begin the year.

“Welcome,” she addressed the school once they had settled, her voice shaky even with the assistance of the sonorus charm , “and welcome back to Sonora Academy. First years, your Deputy Head, Professor Dakin, is now handing you a goblet. Please drink its contents and you will be sorted accordingly.” What Sadi neglected to mention was that the potion in the goblets would change the color of the drinkers skin, and by doing so indicate their House: deep red for Crotalus, bright blue for Aladren, sunshine yellow for Teppenpaw, and muddy brown for Pecari. Usually the Headmistress enjoyed watching the sorting, but today she found herself too tired to summon the usual excitement, and when the first years had found seats with their new Housemates, Sadi found it tiring to stand again and continue her address.

“Now for our start of term announcements. I’d like again to congratulate our Head Boy, Thomas Fitzgerald, and our Head Girl, Jera Valson, both of Aladren, and ask them to collect their badges. I would also like to congratulate our new prefects: Alison Sinclair of Pecari, Pippa Brockert of Teppenpaw, Charlotte Abbott for Crotalus, and for Aladren, James Anthony.” Sadi handed out large, shiny metallic badges to each student as they came to the front of the Hall, and offered repeated congratulations. “Finally, we are again in need of a new transfiguration professor. I hope one will have arrived within the next few weeks; until then you may use your class time for independent study.”

With the announcements now complete, Sadi was greatly looking forward to retiring to her quarters. “Let the Opening Feast commence!” she declared, and instantly the tables were full of every conceivable delicious concoction, and the Hall filled with talk and laughter.
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Demelza Eagle

August 19, 2010 8:31 PM
Demelza Eagle, or so that was what a kind, slightly crazy, lady told her name was, was more than ready to go back to learning magic. Apparently, this place was called Sonora Academy, although Demelza didn’t remember ever going there before. The tall lady with soft brown hair, whose name was Mom, told her about it. And then a man, with darker brown hair like Demelza’s and whose name was Dad, told her that she was going to stay there for several months. Demelza smiled, and believed him. He was very nice too.

Demelza had a very strange summer. She thought it was full of a lot of fun, but Mom and Dad kept asking her strange questions and telling her strange things. They told her that she fell off her brother’s old broom in Africa. Africa! And then they asked if she remembered it, and she said no. Mom and Dad taught her many things: who the people in her house were, where she was going to school, ext. Demelza taught them a lot too: Dad handed her left handed guitar to her, and asked her to play. Demelza showed them how to play a few songs, and they cheered for her! She also taught them and a funny boy, her brother Jamie, how to fly and hit a bludger at the same time. For some reason, they were always more pleased when Demelza taught them something then when they taught her something.

When she met a few people like her cousin Paul and little sister Kat, she felt like she already knew their faces. It was names. Apparently, she was related to a lot of people. Whenever her family asked her if she remembered other people from Sonora Academy, she always said no. She wasn’t even sure why people kept asking her if she “remembered” other things or people. So far, she knew that Mom, Dad, Glenn, Kat, Will, Mickey, Luna, Beth, Jamie, Joe, Timmy, Joel, Paul, Uncle Ethan, Aunt Nancy, Blake, and Uncle Andrew were part of her family. Demelza could remember most of their faces, just not their personalities and names. Everything was so confusing to her, and sometimes she would get very frustrated trying to remember someone. She was in tears when she was trying to have a conversation with Paul, the whole time trying to remember a Christmas song she wrote for him last winter. It was as if there was another life she lived besides the one she thought she was living.

Dad carefully explained Sonora Academy to her: she was going to be a third year there, and she was a friend with a boy named Jude and girl named Delilah. She laughed at Dad, and told him that she didn’t know who those kids were! Dad shook his head, as if he was disappointed in Demelza. She only wanted to please him, though! She liked when he cheered for her while riding her broom or playing her guitar.

When it was time for Demelza to go to Sonora Academy, she was very excited. Maybe, when she went to the school, she would remember it, like how she remembered some people! She boarded a big wagon, where other kids were. No, she didn’t remember this. But, as she looked around, she swore that she had seen a few of those kids before. She tried to think of when or where, but the memory wouldn’t come, and she just got frustrated again. She frowned, and then took out her recorder. It only costed a sickle, but her parents wanted her to continue music, because it made one more intelligent, and the more intelligent Demelza was, the better her memory. Well, that was what some healers told Mom and Dad anyway. Demelza pressed her fingers over a few holes to play a G chord, but she resisted the temptation to blow into it and play. The wagon was crammed with people who might not have appreciated her recorder’s noise ricocheting off the walls, like her little sister Kat. So, she just placed her fingers over the whole, imagining what the chords sounded like in her head.

Finally, the wagon stopped at the school. Demelza’s eyes widened as she looked up at it; for one moment, she let the beauty of it sink in. The next moment, she followed a few older students into a BIG hall, with a waterfall! She grinned, and flipped back her long, chocolate brown hair, her eyes focusing mainly on the waterfall. Fellow students, however, were taking seats at tables. Blake told Demelza that she was Pecari, and therefore had to sit at the Pecari table. But how did she know which table belonged to the Pecaris? She decided that she would wait at a wall until someone directed her. When no one did so and the Headmistress started speaking, Demelza just smiled: she tried not to show how lost she was. She was supposed to know the school like the back of her hand! How was she supposed to explain to people that she apparently knew once that she no longer remembered them, for a reason she couldn’t remember? Jeez, the crazy Pecari’s life was getting way too complicated.

Then, a small hint appeared when the younger students were sorted. Brown=Pecari. She grinned; she remembered that! She skipped over to the Pecari table with the first years, too pleased with herself to care about people looking at her. She took a seat next to someone she didn’t recognize, and smiled at the headmistress. What was her name again? Then, food appeared, and Demelza dug in. Oh yeah, she was hungry! She stuffed a chicken leg in her mouth, and then turned to the person next to her. “Hey. I’m Demelza! Do you know me?” She asked, not talking anywhere near as much as usual, because the question she asked probably sounded really stupid, especially if she asked someone who did know her. Oh well! She grinned at them, so happy that she was going to learn and play Quidditch, and make new friends! She was the Pecari Assistant Captain for their Quidditch team, or so her whole family told her. Demelza thought that she remembered being told so by a darker boy. It must have been a big and proud moment for her. Taking another bite out of her chicken leg, she continued to smile was if nothing was wrong.
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